Retrospective Image-Based Gating of Intracoronary Ultrasound Images for Improved Quantitative Analysis: The Intelligate Method

Sebastiaan A. De Winter, Ronald Hamers, Muzzafer Degertekin, Kengo Tanabe, Pedro A. Lemos, Patrick W. Serruys, Jos R.T.C. Roelandt, Nico Bruining

Research output: Contribution to a Journal (Peer & Non Peer)Articlepeer-review

78 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Quantitative analysis of intracoronary ultrasound (ICUS) studies is performed on a series of tomographic cross-sectional ICUS images acquired during a motorized 0.5 mm/sec catheter pullback. Catheter displacement in the vascular lumen during the cardiac cycle causes an anatomically shuffled ICUS study, which results in a sawtooth-shaped appearance of the coronary segment in longitudinal reconstructed views in quantitative coronary ultrasound software packages. This hampers contour detection and leads to a laborious time-consuming semiquantitative analysis process that may produce inaccurate results. To solve these problems, in the past, online ECG-gated acquisition hardware has been applied. This article describes a novel image-based gating method called Intelligate, which features automatic retrospective selection of end-diastolic frames from videotaped or digitally stored ICUS studies. Our evaluation shows that there are no quantitative differences between analysis results of hardware ECG-gated and Intelligated ICUS studies.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)84-94
Number of pages11
JournalCatheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions
Volume61
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2004
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Coronary disease
  • Imaging
  • Intelligate
  • Ultrasonics

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